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Witness the Epic Battle of Courage and Strength A Resistance Movie You Cannot Miss

Resistance Movie

While I myself go down to Ithaca, rouse his son to a braver pitch, inspire his heart with courage to summon the flowing-haired Achaeans to full assembly, speak his mind to all those suitors, slaughtering on and on his droves of sheep and shambling longhorn cattle. Next I will send him off to Sparta and sandy Pylos, there to learn of his dear father’s journey home. Perhaps he will hear some news and make his name throughout the mortal world. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 1, lines 104-112. Young Telemachus needs courage to confront Penelope’s greedy suitors who feast on his animals, and to go on a journey to find his father. In this passage Athena announces that she will travel to Ithaca to persuade Telemachus to do these very things.

But you, I urge you, think how to drive these suitors from your halls. Come now, listen closely. Take my words to heart. At daybreak summon the island’s lords to full assembly, give your orders to all and call the gods to witness: tell the suitors to scatter, each to his own place. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 1, lines 311-316. Athena comes to the aid of the young, immature and inexperienced Telemachus. She gives him the confidence and strength needed to stand up for the family’s estate and to the suitors who abuse it.

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You must not cling to your boyhood any longer – it’s time you were a man. Haven’t you heard what glory Prince Orestes won throughout the world when he killed that cunning, murderous Aegisthus, who’d killed his famous father? And you, my friend – how tall and handsome I see you now – be brave, you too, so men to come will sing your praises down the years. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 1, lines 341-347. Athena is trying to inspire young Telemachus with the courage to go and search for news about his long-lost father. She wants the boy to become a man through action and by taking on responsibility. She is basically telling Telemachus to grow up and take charge, citing as an example Orestes, who gained glory by killing Aegisthus for having murdered Orestes’ father Agamemnon. Athena says that Telemachus too will win glory if he shows bravery.

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You should be ashamed yourselves, mortified in the face of neighbors living round about! Fear the gods’ wrath – before they wheel in outrage and make these crimes recoil on your heads. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 2, lines 69-72. Telemachus summons up the courage to castigate the suitors for their criminal behavior and he theatens them with justice from the angry gods.

And you, if you have any shame in your own hearts, you must leave my palace! See to your feasting elsewhere, devour your own possessions, house to house by turns. But if you decide the fare is better, richer here, destroying one man’s goods and going scot-free, all right then, carve away! – Homer The Odyssey, Book 2, lines 155-160. Telemachus is fed up with the greedy suitors devouring all of Odysseus’ possessions. He stands up to them and asks them to leave. We see here his growing maturity and courage as he develops into a man. The prince is growing into manhood, but without his father, he knows that he doesn’t have the power to make the the suitors leave.

But I’ll cry out to the everlasting gods in hopes that Zeus will pay you back with a vengeance – all of you destroyed in my house while I go scot-free myself! And to seal his prayer, farseeing Zeus sent down a sign. He launched two eagles soaring high from a mountain ridge and down they glided, borne on the wind’s draft a moment, wing to wingtip, pinions straining taut till just above the assembly’s throbbing hum they whirled, suddenly, wings thrashing, wild onslaught of wings and banking down at the crowd’s heads – a glaring, fatal sign – talons slashing each other, tearing cheeks and throats they swooped away on the right through homes and city. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 2, lines 161-172. The theme of the gods intervening in the affairs of humans is illustrated here. Telemachus prays to Zeus to pay the suitors back for their behavior. Immediately the father of the gods answers his prayer with a fatal omen, sending down two fighting eagles tearing at each other over the heads of the crowd. This foreshadows that the suitors will pay the supreme penalty for their crimes. Telemachus demonstrates his courage in standing up to the suitors.

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Telemachus, you’ll lack neither courage nor sense from this day on, not if your father’s spirit courses through your veins. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 2, lines 302-304. Athena fulfils her promise to inspire Telemachus with the necessary courage to deal with challenges, especially that of dealing with the rapacious suitors. She expresses confidence that the boy Telemachus is maturing into a man and will walk in the shoes of his great father Odysseus.

Few sons are the equals of their fathers; most fall short, all too few surpass them. But you, brave and adept from this day on – Odysseus’ cunning has hardly given out in you – there’s every hope that you will reach your goal. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 2, lines 309-313. Athena assures Telemachus that he will have bravery and his father’s cunning from this day on. She believes that the young prince has his father’s good qualities in abundance.

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Antinous, now how could I dine with you in peace and take my pleasure? You ruffians carousing here! Isn’t it quite enough that you, my mother’s suitors, have ravaged it all, my very best, these many years, while I was still a boy? But now that I’m full-grown and can hear the truth from others, absorb it too while I was still a boy? But now that I’m full-grown and can hear the truth from others, absorb it too – now, yes, that the anger seethes inside me… I’ll stop at nothing to hurl destruction at your heads. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 2, lines 344-351. An emboldened Telemachus, inspired by Athena, displays a man’s courage and determination in this rebuke to suitors’ leader Antinous. As they indulge themselves feasting on the palace food, the young prince lets the suitors know that they are no longer dealing with a timid boy but an angry man. He threatens destruction on their heads. Telemachus is attempting to assume the role of leader of his household.

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Telemachus, no more shyness, this is not the time! We sailed the seas for this, for news of your father – where does he lie buried? what fate did he meet? So go right up to Nestor, breaker of horses. We’ll make him yield the secrets of his heart. Press him yourself to tell the whole truth: he’ll never lie – the man is far too wise. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 3, lines 16-22. Athena has been trying to give Telemachus a crash course in courage and maturity. She continues it here, as she deals with the young prince’s shyness about approaching King Nestor and speaking to him.

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Poised Telemachus answered, filled with heart, the heart Athena herself inspired, to ask for the news about his father, gone so long, and make his name throughout the mortal world. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 3, lines 83-86. Telemachus is inspired by Athena with the courage to ask King Nestor for news about his father Odysseus.

And you, my friend – how tall and handsome I see you now – be brave, you too, so men to come will sing your praises down the years. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 3, lines 225-227. King Nestor offers encouraging words to Telemachus. He tells him to be brave so that people with honor his memory in the years to come.

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what a heart that fearless Odysseus had inside him! What a piece of work the hero dared and carried off in the wooden horse where all our best encamped, our champions armed with bloody death for Troy. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 4, lines 303-306. Menelaus tells the story of the Trojan Horse, which enabled the Greeks to trick the defenders of Troy and take the city after a fruitless ten-year siege. He sings the praises of the brave and cunning Odysseus, credited with the idea of using the horse to deceive the Trojans.

Hear me, dear ones! Zeus has given me torment – me above all the others born and bred in my day. My lionhearted husband, lost, long years ago, who excelled the Argives all in every strength – that great man whose fame resounds through Hellas right to the depths of Argos! But now my son, my darling boy – the whirlwinds have ripped him out of the halls without a trace! I never heard he’d gone – not even from you, you hard, heartless… not one of you even thought to rouse me from my bed, though well you knew when

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Telemachus, no more shyness, this is not the time! We sailed the seas for this, for news of your father – where does he lie buried? what fate did he meet? So go right up to Nestor, breaker of horses. We’ll make him yield the secrets of his heart. Press him yourself to tell the whole truth: he’ll never lie – the man is far too wise. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 3, lines 16-22. Athena has been trying to give Telemachus a crash course in courage and maturity. She continues it here, as she deals with the young prince’s shyness about approaching King Nestor and speaking to him.

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Poised Telemachus answered, filled with heart, the heart Athena herself inspired, to ask for the news about his father, gone so long, and make his name throughout the mortal world. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 3, lines 83-86. Telemachus is inspired by Athena with the courage to ask King Nestor for news about his father Odysseus.

And you, my friend – how tall and handsome I see you now – be brave, you too, so men to come will sing your praises down the years. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 3, lines 225-227. King Nestor offers encouraging words to Telemachus. He tells him to be brave so that people with honor his memory in the years to come.

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what a heart that fearless Odysseus had inside him! What a piece of work the hero dared and carried off in the wooden horse where all our best encamped, our champions armed with bloody death for Troy. – Homer The Odyssey, Book 4, lines 303-306. Menelaus tells the story of the Trojan Horse, which enabled the Greeks to trick the defenders of Troy and take the city after a fruitless ten-year siege. He sings the praises of the brave and cunning Odysseus, credited with the idea of using the horse to deceive the Trojans.

Hear me, dear ones! Zeus has given me torment – me above all the others born and bred in my day. My lionhearted husband, lost, long years ago, who excelled the Argives all in every strength – that great man whose fame resounds through Hellas right to the depths of Argos! But now my son, my darling boy – the whirlwinds have ripped him out of the halls without a trace! I never heard he’d gone – not even from you, you hard, heartless… not one of you even thought to rouse me from my bed, though well you knew when

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